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Nutrition and Brain Row 3 (left to right): Daniel Bunout, Alfonso Fajardo Rodrı́guez, Colleen Adnams, Saúl Ocampo González, Vı́ctor M. Sánchez Nava, Gayle Crozier- Willi, Ricardo Uauy, John D. Fernstrom, Pedro Arroyo, Sally Frautschy, Heidi Storm, Isabelle Bourdel- Marchasson, Irwin H. Rosenberg, Svend Erik Moller, Bruno Vellas, Evelyne Carré Row 2 (left to right): Eggert Holm, John M. Freeman, Marı́a del Carmen Sánchez, Sally Grantham-MacGregor, Héléne Payette, Alberto Pasquetti Ceccateli, Giuseppe Rotilio, Patricia Mena, Cecilia Alagarin Crespo, Patrik Ritz, Yukio Yamori, Christina L. Williams, Catherine Bailly, Jeanette Pardio, Daisy Evangeline Garcı́a, Perry Noble, Evangelos Kaloussis, Philippe Steenhout Top row (left to right): Ferdinand Haschke, Hishan Abd Rabbo, Mario Mandujano Valdes, Luis M. Gutiérrez-Robledo, Stephen C. Woods, Frantisek Bauer Nove Zamky, Walter H. Kaye, Patricio Peirano, Greg M. Cole, Antonio Carlos Campos, George Tadross, Warren H. Meck, Mauritz Vandewoude, Wolfgang Langhans, Santosh K. Bhargava, Shuji Tobita, Franck Arnaud- Battandier, Joel Faintuch Nestlé Nutrition Workshop Series Clinical & Performance Program, Vol. 5 Nutrition and Brain John D. Fernstrom, Pittsburgh, Pa., USA Ricardo Uauy, Santiago, Chile Pedro Arroyo, Mexico D.F., Mexico Nestec Ltd., 55 Avenue Nestlé, CH–1800 Vevey (Switzerland) S. Karger AG, P.O. Box, CH–4009 Basel (Switzerland) www.karger.com 2001 Nestec Ltd., Vevey (Switzerland) and S. Karger AG, Basel (Switzerland). All rights reserved. This book is protected by copyright. No part of it may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, or recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher. Printed in Switzerland on acid-free paper by Reinhardt Druck, Basel ISBN 3–8055–7166–6 ISSN 1422–7584 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Nutrition and brain/John D. Fernstrom, Ricardo Uauy, Pedro Arroyo [editors]. p. cm. – (Nestlé Nutrition workshop series. Clinical & performance program; vol. 5) Proceedings of a Nestlé Nurition Workshop. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 3805571666 1. Brain – Congresses. 2. Nutrition – Congresses. 3. Nutritionally induced diseases – Congresses. 4. Mental illness – Nutritional aspects – Congresses. I. Fernstrom, John D. II. Uauy, Ricardo. III. Arroyo, Pedro. IV. Nestlé Nutrition workshop series. Clinical & performance program; v. 5. QP376.N862 2000 612.8’2 – dc21 00-050645 The material contained in this volume was submitted as previously unpublished material, except in the instances in which credit has been given to the source from which some of the illustrative material was derived. Great care has been taken to maintain the accuracy of the information contained in the volume. However, neither Nestec Ltd. nor S. Karger AG can be held responsible for errors or for any consequences arising from the use of the information contained herein. Contents VII Preface XI Foreword XIII Contributors 1 Undernutrition and Mental Development S.M. Grantham-McGregor, C.C. Ani (London) 19 Interaction of Iron Deficiency Anemia and Neurofunctions in Cognitive Development P. Peirano, C. Algarı́n, M. Garrido, F. Pizarro (Santiago), M. Roncagliolo (Santiago/Valparaiso), B. Lozoff (Ann Arbor, Mich.) 41 Mechanisms for Nutrient Effects on Brain Development and Cognition R. Uauy (Santiago/Dallas, Tex.), P. Mena, P. Peirano (Santiago) 73 Carbohydrate and Fat-Based Appetite Control Mechanisms W. Langhans (Zürich) 93 Neuropeptides and the Control of Energy Homeostasis S.C. Woods, P.A. Rushing, R.J. Seeley (Cincinnati, Ohio) 117 Diet, Monoamine Neurotransmitters and Appetite Control J.D. Fernstrom, M.H. Fernstrom (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 135 Nutrients and Affective Disorders S.E. Møller (Valby-Copenhagen) V Contents 153 Nutrition, Serotonin and Behavior in Anorexia and Bulimia nervosa W. Kaye (Pittsburgh, Pa.), K. Gendall (Christchurch), M. Strober (Los Angeles, Calif.) 169 Lipids in Neural Function: Modulation of Behavior by Oral Administration of Endocannabinoids Found in Foods G. Crozier Willi, A. Berger (Lausanne), V. Di Marzo, T. Bisogno, L. De Petrocellis (Naples), E. Fride, R. Mechoulam (Jerusalem) 189 Nutritional Impact on Sleep-Wake Cycle F. Garcı́a-Garcı́a, R. Drucker-Colı́n (Mexico D.F.) 201 Aging, B Vitamins and Cognitive Decline I.H. Rosenberg (Boston, Mass.) 219 Diet-Related Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease: Different Hypotheses A.-S. Nicolas, B. Vellas (Toulouse) 231 Nutritional Pathogenesis and Prevention of Stroke Y. Yamori, K. Ikeda, (Kyoto), M. Tagami, (Kyoto/Tokyo), K. Yamagata and Y. Nara (Kyoto/Shimonoseki) 247 Risk from Exposure to Metals: Deficits and Excesses (Cu, Fe, Mn, Al, Cr, B) G. Rotilio (Rome) 263 Nutritional Reversion of Cognitive Impairment in the Elderly D. Bunout, C. Fjeld (Santiago) 283 Metabolic Encephalopathies: Liver Disease, Renal Failure, Critical Illness E. Holm, R. Breitkreutz, M. Tokus (Heidelberg) 307 The Ketogenic Diet and Epilepsy J.M. Freeman (Baltimore, Md.) 323 Subject Index Note: Omega-3, ω-3 and n-3 have the same meaning; however, for convenience, n-3 has been used throughout this publication. VI Preface The connection between nutrition and brain function has been recognized for almost 100 years. Early investigations focused on nutritional deficiency diseases, such as pellagra and protein-calorie malnutrition, because they were observed to diminish cognition and mental function. Toward the end of the last century, in part because of advances in the ability to study chemical, structural and functional mechanisms underlying brain function, an explosion of interest in the ’blood-brain barrier’ as a modulator of nutrient flux into and out of the brain, and the observation that important brain molecules (e.g., neurotransmitters) are readily influenced by changes in the diet, the examination of the interaction between nutrition and brain function expanded phenomenally. This development has led not only to a large body of knowledge regarding how particular nutrients modify brain chemistry and function (e.g., amino acids that are the precursors of brain neurotransmitters; essential fatty acids that are the precursors of important structural lipids and signaling molecules in brain, vitamins that are cofactors in key metabolic pathways in brain), how nutrients alter the secretion of hormones that directly influence brain function, and how diet, by modifying aspects of body metabolism, alters brain function (e.g., in starvation via changes in important metabolic intermediates). It has also precipitated a growing recognition that the brain may not be a passive recipient of such changes, but may perceive them as signals to institute nutritional and metabolic adjustments (e.g., to modify food selection). During the past decade, advances in the nutrition-brain area have also led to the concept that nutrients and diet may be useful in treating or preventing disease states not previously identified with food intake, such as epilepsy, certain metabolically-derived encephalopathies, and the loss of cognitive function and memory that accompanies aging. VII Preface The recognition that advances in the nutrition-brain interaction area are leading to new insights in the treatment and prevention of disease stimulated the choice of the nutrition-brain topic for the 5th Nestlé Nutrition Workshop. The workshop Nutrition and the Brain attempted to highlight the diversity in this area of investigation, rather than focus on a specific topic, in order to cross-foster ideas and stimulate discussion, and to promote new insights into the study of this complex topic. The proceedings volume reflects this diversity. The first section focuses on that aspect of nutrition and brain function relating to nutritional inadequacies; it documents the role nutritional inadequacies can play in limiting cognitive development and mental function in underdeveloped countries, and discusses some of the changing demographics in these countries that may contribute to, exacerbate or change the etiology of undernutrition. The second section considers some of the more basic aspects of the nutrition-brain link by reviewing experimental evidence illuminating mechanisms currently thought to govern energy homeostasis in the body, appetite and food choice. It discusses the roles of several neurotransmitters and hormones in this process, their relation to diet, and considers the possibility that their actions can lead to new pharmacologic strategies for controlling appetite and energy balance, an issue of particular relevance in countries where obesity is now a public health crisis. The third section focuses on specific issues relating nutrition to brain function in humans. Here, food intake is linked to sleep, mood and food intake. In particular, the connection between the intake of tryptophan and other amino acids is examined in relation to depression. And, the eating disorders (bulimia nervosa, anorexia nervosa) are discussed from the perspective that inherited abnormalities in the functioning of neurotransmitters (notably serotonin) derived from amino acids may promote very unusual dietary practices in patients in an attempt to moderate these transmitter aberrations. Foods are also considered as matrices for naturally-occurring, brain-active agents having notable, pharmacologic, receptor-mediated actions on brain function. The fourth section considers nutritional factors that may contribute to the loss of cognitive functioning with aging. Specific topics discussed include the possibilities that inadequate vitamin B status in aging can compromise cognitive function by changing important methylation reactions in brain, and/or possibly by increasing the risk of occlusive vascular disease and stroke; that cognitive deficits, such as those that develop in patients with Alzheimer’s disease, may result from oxidative damage, and thus be treated or prevented through the use of dietary antioxidants (e.g., vitamin E); that neurodegeneration can result from deficits or excesses in the intake of metals like copper, iron, chromium and aluminum that can promote oxidative injury to neurons and glia in brain, and that inherited susceptibilities to stroke may be caused by particular nutritional excesses and inadequacies. The fifth section presents examples of disease states that affect mental function, and how diet can be used to ameliorate disease symptomatology. Liver and renal disease offer VIII Preface insight into dietary manipulations that moderate the metabolic aberrations occurring outside the brain to improve mental function, while epilepsy offers the remarkable example of a dietary strategy that appears to control seizure activity in the brains of children for whom no other treatment has succeeded. Overall, this workshop provided a forum for highlighting many of the diverse areas of investigation linking nutrition and metabolism to the normal (and abnormal) functioning of the brain. It served to facilitate links between several of these disciplines, and hopefully will stimulate new insights and research. Our expectation is that it will also ultimately lead to new clinical applications in this area, and serve to improve patient care. We hope that this publication will serve to inform, update and stimulate clinicians and scientists interested in nutrition-brain interactions. John D. Fernstrom, Ricardo Uauy IX Foreword Undernutrition early in life results in impaired growth but also in lower IQ, cognitive deficits, behavioral problems, and impaired motor skills. It has been proven that deficits continue until school age, adolescence, and even adulthood. Prevention through healthcare measures and an improved socioeconomic environment are of paramount importance in worldwide efforts. It is amazing that adequate nutritional supplements provided during the third trimester of pregnancy and during the first 2 years of life can protect the brain but supplementation later on in life has little effect. Future research focusing on the nutrient-gene interactions in the case of early malnutrition will contribute to the creation of more targeted programs to protect the brain. Mood disorders in adults have a prevalence of 11% and result in significant disability. The death rate from anorexia nervosa is above 10%. Underdiagnosis and undertreatment of those disorders is common. Nutrient effects on mood, behavior, and psychiatric disorders can be used to prevent disease or even support treatment. The research in the field of aromatic amino acids and long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids is most encouraging. Vascular disease is a risk factor for inadequate blood supply of the aging brain. Increased plasma homocysteine as a marker for low B12 , folate, and B6 status has been identified as an indicator for vascular disease. Adequate supply of those vitamins and antioxidants could play an important role in the prevention of stroke and Alzheimer’s disease. In addition, the reversal of age-related impairment in cognitive function by dietary manipulation must be a long-term goal for nutritional intervention. XI Foreword I would like to take this opportunity to thank the Chairmen, Professor John Fernstrom and Doctors Ricardo Uauy and Pedro Arroyo for their contribution to this workshop. Our thanks to the Nestlé team who organized the workshop, in particular to Mr. Zurita in Mexico and Dr. Philippe Steenhout at the Center, who helped to set up this workshop. Prof. Ferdinand Haschke, MD Vice-President Nestec Ltd, Vevey, Switzerland XII Contributors Speakers Dr. Pedro Arroyo Fundación Mexicana para la Salud Periférico Sur 4809 El Arenal Tepepan – Tlalpan 14610 Mexico, D.F. Mexico Tel. C52 5 655 9011 or 655 3402 Fax C52 5 655 8211 E-mail: [email protected] Dr. Daniel Bunout Instituto de Nutrición y Tecnologia de los Alimentos (INTA) Av. Macul 5540 Santiago Chile E-mail: [email protected] Dr. Gayle Crozier-Willi Nestec Ltd Av. Nestlé 55 CH-1800 Vevey Switzerland Tel. C41 21 924 3273 Fax C41 21 924 4547 E-mail: [email protected] Dr. René Drucker-Colin Depto.de Fisiologia Facultad de Medicina Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM) Apdo. Postal 70-250 Mexico D.F. Mexico Tel. C52 5 550 2920 Fax C52 5 623 2241 E-mail: [email protected] Prof. John D. Fernstrom University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Room 1620 3811 O’hara Street Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA Tel. C1 412 6242032 Fax C1 412 6243696 E-mail: [email protected] XIII Contributors Dr. John M. Freeman Johns Hopkins Hospital The Pediatric Epilepsy Center 600 N. Wolfe Street/ Meyer 2-147 Baltimore, MD 21287-7247, USA Tel. C1 410 955 9100 Fax C1 410 614 0373 E-mail: [email protected] Dr. Sally Grantham-MacGregor Centre for International Child Health Institute of Child Health 30 Guilford Street WC1N 1EH London, UK Tel. C44 207 242 9789 ext. 2160 Fax C44 207 404 2062 E-mail: [email protected] Prof. Eggert Holm Department of Pathophysiology Medical Clinic I, University of Heidelberg Theodor Kutzer Ufer D-68167 Mannheim Germany Tel. C49 621 3832643 Fax C49 621 3832191 E-mail: [email protected] Dr. Walter H. Kaye Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic 3811 O’Hara Street, Room E-724 Pittsburgh, PA 15213-2593, USA Tel. C1 412 624 3507 Fax C1 412 624 6811 E-mail: [email protected] Prof. Wolfgang Langhans Physiology & Animal Husbandry Institute of Animal Sciences Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Universitätstrasse 2 CH-8092 Zurich Switzerland Tel. C41 01 632 3306 XIV Fax C41 01 632 1308 E-mail: [email protected] Dr. Svend Erik Møller International Marketing H. Lundbeck A/S Ottiliavej 9 DK-2500 Valby-Copenhagen Denmark Tel. C45 3630 1311 ext. 2822 Fax C45 3644 0455 E-mail: [email protected] Dr. Patricio Peirano Instituto de Nutrición y Tecnologia de los Alimentos (INTA) Av. Macul 5540 Santiago, Chile E-mail: [email protected] Prof. Irwin H. Rosenberg Jean Mayer HNRC Tufts University 711 Washington Street Boston, MA 02111, USA Tel. C1 617 556 3254 Fax C1 617 556 3295 E-mail: [email protected] Prof. Giuseppe Rotilio Istituto Nazionale della Nutrizione Via Ardeatina 546 I-00178 Rome, Italy Tel. C39 06 725 94373 Fax C39 06 725 04311 E-mail: [email protected] [email protected] Dr. Ricardo Uauy Instituto de Nutrición y Tecnologia de los Alimentos (INTA) Av. Macul 5540 Santiago, Chile Tel. C56 2 2214105 Fax C56 2 2214030 E-mail: [email protected] Contributors Prof. Bruno Vellas CHU Casselardit Service de Médecine Interne et Gérontologie Clinique 170 avenue de Casselardit F-31300 Toulouse France Tel. C33 5 617 77649 Fax C33 5 614 97109 E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected] Prof. Steve C. Woods Obesity Research Center University of Cincinnati Medical College PO Box 670559 Cincinnati, OH 45267-0559, USA Tel. C1 513 558 6799 Fax C1 513 558 8990 E-mail: [email protected] Prof. Yukio Yamori Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies Kyoto University Yoshida Nihonmatsu-cho, Sakyo-ku Kyoto, 606-8501, Japan Tel. C81 075 753 6880 Fax C81 075 753 2997 E-mail: [email protected] Participants Belgium Prof. Mauritz Vandewoude Japan Dr. Shuji Tobita Brazil Dr. Antonio Carlos Campos Dr. Joel Faintuch Mexico Dr. Alfonso Fajardo Rodrıguez Dr. Saúl Garza Morales Dr. Luis M. Gutiérrez Robledo Dr. Mario Mandujano Valdés Dr. Saúl Ocampo González L.N. Jeanette Pardio López Dr. Alberto Pasquetti Ceccateli Dra. Sandra Porcayo Liborio Dr. Francisco Revilla Pacheco Dr. Abelardo Salazar Zuñiga Dra. Mar ı́a del Carmen Sánchez Dr. Vıctor M. Sánchez Nava Dr. Jesús Tapia Jurado Canada Dr. Hélène Payette Chile Dr. Patricia Mena Egypt Dr. H. Abd Rabbo France Dr. Isabelle Bourdel-Marchasson Dr. Evelyne Carré Prof. Patrick Ritz India Dr. Santosh Bhargava Philippines Dr. Perry Noble Dr. Daisy Evangelinne Garcia XV Contributors Slovakia Dr. Franstisek Bauer South Africa Dr. Coleen Adnams United States of America Dr. Gregory Cole Prof. Sally A. Frautschy Prof. Warren H. Meck Dr. Christina L. Williams Nestlé attendees Jorge Arévalo / Mexico Franck Arnaud-Battandier, MD / France Catherine Bailly / Switzerland Ferdinand Haschke, PHD, MD / Switzerland Fernando Infante Pizano / Mexico Evangelos Kaloussis / Switzerland Philippe Steenhout, MD / Switzerland Heidi Storm / USA George Tadross / Egypt XVI